Dealing with Disasters from Early Modern to Modern Times
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Edited by:
Hanneke Asperen
and Lotte Jensen
About this book
This volume addresses cultural representations of catastrophes such as floods, epidemics, and earthquakes over the centuries. In the past as now, artists and authors try to make sense of disasters, grasp their impact, and communicate moral, religious, or political messages. These creations reflect and shape how people learn and think about disasters that occur nearby or far away, both in time and space. The parallels between past and present underline how this book contributes to modern debates about cultural and creative strategies in response to disasters.
Author / Editor information
Hanneke van Asperen is an art historian affiliated with the Centre for Art Historical Documentation (CKD) at the Radboud University in Nijmegen. As postdoctoral researcher, she is part of the NWO-funded project Dealing with Disasters. The Shaping of Local and National Identities in the Netherlands (1421-1890). She has an expertise in visual images of charity and nature-induced disasters in premodern times. Additionally, she has an interest in medieval pilgrimage and religious badges. Her recent book Silver Saints. Prayers and Badges in Late Medieval Books (Brepols 2021) focuses on the practice of adding religious badges to devotional manuscripts.Jensen Lotte :
Lotte Jensen is Professor of Dutch Cultural and Literary History at Radboud University, Nijmegen and Principal Investigator of the NWO-funded Vici project Dealing with Disasters. The Shaping of Local and National Identities in the Netherlands (1421-1890), which investigates the impact of natural disasters on Dutch local and national identities from a cultural-historical perspective. She has published books on Napoleon’s legacy in the Netherlands, Dutch literary history and the emergence of Dutch identity. Her most recent book is a cultural history of Dutch floods: Wij en het water. Een Nederlandse geschiedenis (De Bezige Bij 2022).
Reviews
-- Daniel R. Curtis, Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, Vol. 136, Issue 3, December 2023
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Hanneke van Asperen and Lotte Jensen Open Access Download PDF |
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Part 1: Disaster and Emotions
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Susan Broomhall Open Access Download PDF |
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How and Why a Poet in Poland Engaged with the Delft Thunderclap of 1654 Paul Hulsenboom Open Access Download PDF |
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Emotional Engagement in Visual Images of Floods Hanneke van Asperen Open Access Download PDF |
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Compassion, Catastrophe, and National Identification in the Netherlands in the Nineteenth Century Fons Meijer Open Access Download PDF |
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Lotte Jensen Open Access Download PDF |
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Part 2: Disaster and Blame
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Selling Apocalyptic Interpretations of Disasters in the Sixteenth-Century Low Countries Marieke van Egeraat Open Access Download PDF |
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The Sensemaking of Epidemic Depopulation in Sixteenth- Century Mesoamerica Florian Wieser Open Access Download PDF |
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The Visualisation of the Great Irish Famine (1845–1851) and the Lancashire Cotton Famine (1861–1865) in the Victorian Illustrated Press Sophie van Os Open Access Download PDF |
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Community, Precariousness, and Blame Anneloek Scholten Open Access Download PDF |
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Part 3: Disaster and Time
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Theo Dekker Open Access Download PDF |
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Joop W. Koopmans Open Access Download PDF |
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Julia Mariko Jacoby Open Access Download PDF |
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Disaster, Time, and Nation in Dutch Flood Commemoration Books, 1757–1800 Adriaan Duiveman Open Access Download PDF |
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General Considerations and Case Studies from Europe and the United States (19th–21st Centuries) Christian Rohr Open Access Download PDF |
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